| // Copyright 2017 Parity Technologies (UK) Ltd. | |
| // | |
| // Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a | |
| // copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), | |
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| // Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions: | |
| // | |
| // The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in | |
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| // | |
| // THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS | |
| // OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, | |
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| // DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE. | |
| //! # Multistream-select Protocol Negotiation | |
| //! | |
| //! This crate implements the `multistream-select` protocol, which is the protocol | |
| //! used by libp2p to negotiate which application-layer protocol to use with the | |
| //! remote on a connection or substream. | |
| //! | |
| //! > **Note**: This crate is used primarily by core components of *libp2p* and it | |
| //! > is usually not used directly on its own. | |
| //! | |
| //! ## Roles | |
| //! | |
| //! Two peers using the multistream-select negotiation protocol on an I/O stream | |
| //! are distinguished by their role as a _dialer_ (or _initiator_) or as a _listener_ | |
| //! (or _responder_). Thereby the dialer plays the active part, driving the protocol, | |
| //! whereas the listener reacts to the messages received. | |
| //! | |
| //! The dialer has two options: it can either pick a protocol from the complete list | |
| //! of protocols that the listener supports, or it can directly suggest a protocol. | |
| //! Either way, a selected protocol is sent to the listener who can either accept (by | |
| //! echoing the same protocol) or reject (by responding with a message stating | |
| //! "not available"). If a suggested protocol is not available, the dialer may | |
| //! suggest another protocol. This process continues until a protocol is agreed upon, | |
| //! yielding a [`Negotiated`] stream, or the dialer has run out of | |
| //! alternatives. | |
| //! | |
| //! See [`dialer_select_proto`] and [`listener_select_proto`]. | |
| //! | |
| //! ## [`Negotiated`] | |
| //! | |
| //! A `Negotiated` represents an I/O stream that has settled on a protocol | |
| //! to use. By default, with [`Version::V1`], protocol negotiation is always | |
| //! at least one dedicated round-trip message exchange, before application | |
| //! data for the negotiated protocol can be sent by the dialer. There is | |
| //! a variant [`Version::V1Lazy`] that permits 0-RTT negotiation if the | |
| //! dialer only supports a single protocol. In that case, when a dialer | |
| //! settles on a protocol to use, the [`DialerSelectFuture`] yields a | |
| //! [`Negotiated`] I/O stream before the negotiation | |
| //! data has been flushed. It is then expecting confirmation for that protocol | |
| //! as the first messages read from the stream. This behaviour allows the dialer | |
| //! to immediately send data relating to the negotiated protocol together with the | |
| //! remaining negotiation message(s). Note, however, that a dialer that performs | |
| //! multiple 0-RTT negotiations in sequence for different protocols layered on | |
| //! top of each other may trigger undesirable behaviour for a listener not | |
| //! supporting one of the intermediate protocols. See | |
| //! [`dialer_select_proto`] and the documentation of [`Version::V1Lazy`] for further details. | |
| //! | |
| //! ## Examples | |
| //! | |
| //! For a dialer: | |
| //! | |
| //! ```no_run | |
| //! use async_std::net::TcpStream; | |
| //! use multistream_select::{dialer_select_proto, Version}; | |
| //! use futures::prelude::*; | |
| //! | |
| //! async_std::task::block_on(async move { | |
| //! let socket = TcpStream::connect("127.0.0.1:10333").await.unwrap(); | |
| //! | |
| //! let protos = vec!["/echo/1.0.0", "/echo/2.5.0"]; | |
| //! let (protocol, _io) = dialer_select_proto(socket, protos, Version::V1).await.unwrap(); | |
| //! | |
| //! println!("Negotiated protocol: {:?}", protocol); | |
| //! // You can now use `_io` to communicate with the remote. | |
| //! }); | |
| //! ``` | |
| //! | |
| mod dialer_select; | |
| mod length_delimited; | |
| mod listener_select; | |
| mod negotiated; | |
| mod protocol; | |
| pub use self::dialer_select::{dialer_select_proto, DialerSelectFuture}; | |
| pub use self::listener_select::{listener_select_proto, ListenerSelectFuture}; | |
| pub use self::negotiated::{Negotiated, NegotiatedComplete, NegotiationError}; | |
| pub use self::protocol::ProtocolError; | |
| /// Supported multistream-select versions. | |
| pub enum Version { | |
| /// Version 1 of the multistream-select protocol. See [1] and [2]. | |
| /// | |
| /// [1]: https://github.com/libp2p/specs/blob/master/connections/README.md#protocol-negotiation | |
| /// [2]: https://github.com/multiformats/multistream-select | |
| V1, | |
| /// A "lazy" variant of version 1 that is identical on the wire but whereby | |
| /// the dialer delays flushing protocol negotiation data in order to combine | |
| /// it with initial application data, thus performing 0-RTT negotiation. | |
| /// | |
| /// This strategy is only applicable for the node with the role of "dialer" | |
| /// in the negotiation and only if the dialer supports just a single | |
| /// application protocol. In that case the dialer immedidately "settles" | |
| /// on that protocol, buffering the negotiation messages to be sent | |
| /// with the first round of application protocol data (or an attempt | |
| /// is made to read from the `Negotiated` I/O stream). | |
| /// | |
| /// A listener will behave identically to `V1`. This ensures interoperability with `V1`. | |
| /// Notably, it will immediately send the multistream header as well as the protocol | |
| /// confirmation, resulting in multiple frames being sent on the underlying transport. | |
| /// Nevertheless, if the listener supports the protocol that the dialer optimistically | |
| /// settled on, it can be a 0-RTT negotiation. | |
| /// | |
| /// > **Note**: `V1Lazy` is specific to `rust-libp2p`. The wire protocol is identical to `V1` | |
| /// > and generally interoperable with peers only supporting `V1`. Nevertheless, there is a | |
| /// > pitfall that is rarely encountered: When nesting multiple protocol negotiations, the | |
| /// > listener should either be known to support all of the dialer's optimistically chosen | |
| /// > protocols or there is must be no intermediate protocol without a payload and none of | |
| /// > the protocol payloads must have the potential for being mistaken for a multistream-select | |
| /// > protocol message. This avoids rare edge-cases whereby the listener may not recognize | |
| /// > upgrade boundaries and erroneously process a request despite not supporting one of | |
| /// > the intermediate protocols that the dialer committed to. See [1] and [2]. | |
| /// | |
| /// [1]: https://github.com/multiformats/go-multistream/issues/20 | |
| /// [2]: https://github.com/libp2p/rust-libp2p/pull/1212 | |
| V1Lazy, | |
| // Draft: https://github.com/libp2p/specs/pull/95 | |
| // V2, | |
| } | |
| impl quickcheck::Arbitrary for Version { | |
| fn arbitrary(g: &mut quickcheck::Gen) -> Self { | |
| *g.choose(&[Version::V1, Version::V1Lazy]) | |
| .expect("slice not empty") | |
| } | |
| } | |